Gulf Today

Manipur CM meets Shah after violence surfaces

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NEW Delhi: manipur Chief Minister N. Biren Singh, accompanie­d by his ministeria­l colleagues and MLAS, on Sunday let for Delhi, where he would meet Prime Minister Narendra Modi, union Home Minister Amit Shah and other central leaders to discuss the prevailing situation of the state, devastated in the recent ethnic violence.

Sources close to both the government and the ruling BJP said that the Chief Minister, other ministers and state leaders were supposed to go to Delhi immediatel­y ater the ethnic violence broke out on May 3, but the Prime Minister, Home Minister, other central leaders were busy with the Karnataka Assembly elections, leading to the meetings being put off.

Power, Forest and Agricultur­e Minister Biswajit Singh, who is as second in command to Biren Singh, and state BJP President Adhikarima­yum Sharda Devi also accompanie­d the Chief Minister.

According to the source, the issue of the ongoing Suspension of Operation (SOO) with the Kuki militant oufits of the state is also likely to be discussed besides the ethnic violence and subsequent developmen­ts.

The Chief Minister’s visit to the national capital assumes significan­ce as the 10 tribal MLAS belonging to the Chin-kuki-mizo-zomi groups indirectly demanded a “separate state” for the tribals on Friday in the wake of recent violent clashes between the non-tribal Meiteis and the tribals.

Of the 10 MLAS, five belong to the BJP, two each from Janata Dal-united and Kuki People’s Alliance (KPA) and one is an Independen­t.

The Janata Dal-united, the KPA and the independen­t MLAS are also part of the BJP led alliance government in Manipur.

Claiming the lives of around 70 people and injuring a few hundred, ethnic violence, clashes, rampant arsoning, indiscrimi­nate vandalisat­ion, random destructio­n of government and private properties broke out in Manipur ater a ‘Tribal Solidarity March’ organised in the 10 hill districts on May 3 to protest against the Meitei community’s demand for Scheduled Tribe (ST) status.

The violence was preceded by tension and protests over the eviction of Kuki villagers from reserve forest land and destructio­n of poppy cultivatio­n, which had led to a series of agitations in local level.

The non-tribal Meiteis account for about 53 per cent of Manipur’s population and live mostly in the Valley areas while the tribals belonging to Naga and Kuki communitie­s constitute another 40 per cent of the population and reside in the hill districts.

 ?? Agence France-presse ?? ↑
Meites refugees arrive to board a paramilita­ry truck at a transit point after being evacuated near Imphal, recently.
Agence France-presse ↑ Meites refugees arrive to board a paramilita­ry truck at a transit point after being evacuated near Imphal, recently.

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